Key Point: “Only the first payment of the enhanced child tax credit has gone out so far, but it already seems to be having a big impact on American families. Parents reported less trouble affording food and paying for household expenses after the first payment was sent on July 15, according to the latest Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey, released Wednesday.”
CNN: The child tax credit may be helping ease economic hardship after just one round
By Tami Luhbi
August 12, 2021
Only the first payment of the enhanced child tax credit has gone out so far, but it already seems to be having a big impact on American families.
Parents reported less trouble affording food and paying for household expenses after the first payment was sent on July 15, according to the latest Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey, released Wednesday.
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Spending on school needs and food
Parents spent their child tax credit payments on more than one thing, but school expenses was the largest category, according to the Census Bureau. Some 57% used at least part of the money for books and supplies, tuition, tutoring, school transportation or after-school activities (not including child care).
Some 47% of parents used at least some of the funds for food, while 28% spent it on Internet, cell phones and other utilities and nearly a quarter purchased clothing.
“It looks like families are using this to pay for basic needs that their kids have,” Schanzenbach said. “These are things we know many families are struggling with. This extra payment is going to reduce the number of families at risk.”
Overall, some 27% of parents said mostly spent the child tax credit payment, 32% said they mostly saved it and 40% said they mostly used it to pay down debt, according to the survey.
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Enhanced payments
The enhanced child tax credit — which is only in effect for 2021 — is expected to cut child poverty nearly in half, experts say.
Families will receive five more monthly payments, including the one coming at the end of this week. Those funds will account for half of their child tax credit — they can claim the other half when they file their taxes next year.
The monthly payments are part of the big enhancement Congress made to the tax credit as part of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan in March.
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More low-income parents also became eligible for the child tax credit because the relief package makes it fully refundable. It had been only partially refundable — leaving more than 26 million children unable to get the full credit because their families’ incomes were too low, according to Treasury Department estimates.
The beefed-up credit is scheduled to expire after 2021, but President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats want to extend it for a few more years, if not make it permanent.
The impact on struggling households shows the need to make the enhancement permanent, said Natalie Foster, co-founder of the Economic Security Project, which advocates for guaranteed income payments and the reining in of concentrated corporate power.
“The fact that we see a significant number of families reporting less food insecurity from one check is a reminder of how important these checks are,” she said.
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